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Intel Mesa Vulkan driver now supports shaderInt16

The Vulkan specification includes a number of optional features that drivers may or may not support, as described in chapter 30.1 Features. Application developers can query the driver for supported features via vkGetPhysicalDeviceFeatures() and then activate the subset they need in the pEnabledFeatures field of the VkDeviceCreateInfo structure passed at device creation time.

In the last few weeks I have been spending some time, together with my colleague Chema, adding support for one of these features in Anvil, the Intel Vulkan driver in Mesa, called shaderInt16, which we landed in Mesa master last week. This is an optional feature available since Vulkan 1.0. From the spec:

shaderInt16 specifies whether 16-bit integers (signed and unsigned) are supported in shader code. If this feature is not enabled, 16-bit integer types must not be used in shader code. This also specifies whether shader modules can declare the Int16 capability.

It is probably relevant to highlight that this Vulkan capability also requires the SPIR-V Int16 capability, which basically means that the driver’s SPIR-V compiler backend can actually digest SPIR-V shaders that declare and use 16-bit integers, and which is really the core of the functionality exposed by the Vulkan feature.

Ideally, shaderInt16 would increase the overall throughput of integer operations in shaders, leading to better performance when you don’t need a full 32-bit range. It may also provide better overall register usage since you need less register space to store your integer data during shader execution. It is important to remark, however, that not all hardware platforms (Intel or otherwise) may have native support for all possible types of 16-bit operations, and thus, some of them might still need to run in 32-bit (which requires injecting type conversion instructions in the shader code). For Intel platforms, this is the case for operations associated with integer division.

From the point of view of the driver, this is the first time that we generally exercise lower bit-size data types in the driver compiler backend, so if you find any bugs in the implementation, please file bug reports in bugzilla!

Speaking of shaderInt16, I think it is worth mentioning its interactions with other Vulkan functionality that we implemented in the past: the Vulkan 1.0 VK_KHR_16bit_storage extension (which has been promoted to core in Vulkan 1.1). From the spec:

The VK_KHR_16bit_storage extension allows use of 16-bit types in shader input and output interfaces, and push constant blocks. This extension introduces several new optional features which map to SPIR-V capabilities and allow access to 16-bit data in Block-decorated objects in the Uniform and the StorageBuffer storage classes, and objects in the PushConstant storage class. This extension allows 16-bit variables to be declared and used as user-defined shader inputs and outputs but does not change location assignment and component assignment rules.

While the shaderInt16 capability provides the means to operate with 16-bit integers inside a shader, the VK_KHR_16bit_storage extension provides developers with the means to also feed shaders with 16-bit integer (and also floating point) input data, such as Uniform/Storage Buffer Objects or Push Constants, from the applications side, plus, it also gives the opportunity for linked shader stages in a graphics pipeline to consume 16-bit shader inputs and produce 16-bit shader outputs.

VK_KHR_16bit_storage and shaderInt16 should be seen as two parts of a whole, each one addressing one part of a larger problem: VK_KHR_16bit_storage can help reduce memory bandwith for Uniform and Storage Buffer data accessed from the shaders and / or optimize Push Constant space, of which there are only a few bytes available, making it a precious shader resource, but without shaderInt16, shaders that are fed 16-bit input data are still required to convert this data to 32-bit internally for operation (and then back again to 16-bit for output if needed). Likewise, shaders that use shaderInt16 without VK_KHR_16bit_storage can only operate with 16-bit data that is generated inside the shader, which largely limits its usage. Both together, however, give you the complete functionality.

Conclusions

We are very happy to continue expanding the feature set supported in Anvil and we look forward to seeing application developers making good use of shaderInt16 in Vulkan to improve shader performance. As noted above, this is the first time that we fully enable the shader compiler backend to do general purpose operations on lower bit-size data types and there might be things that we can still improve or optimize. If you hit any issues with the implementation, please contact us and / or file bug reports so we can continue to improve the implementation.

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2 comments

Nice!
can you also expose shaderFloat16 now in some way on Intel Anvil..
we have fp16 support on D3D11/12 driver via exposing 16bit min precision support and also on OpenCL via cl_khr_fp16..
AMD supports fp16 on Vulkan via {VK,SPV}_AMD_gpu_shader_half_float..
perhaps supporting that is better as some Vulkan games like Wolfenstein II perhaps are running it and running via Wine Vulkan support may get optimizations also..

That is still a work-in-progress, we plan to send another, more complete, version of that series of patches in the near future. While we don’t enable any particular capability or extension here I think that should be sufficient for the driver to consume SPIR-V shaders that include 16-bit floating point instructions. You might get a few compiler warnings because we don’t really expose the Float16 SPIR-V capability yet, but otherwise it should mostly work.